"Super Fun Night," the freshman comedy starring Rebel Wilson, got a super big surge in the 18-to-49 age group compared with its last first-run airing two weeks ago, growing its rating 24% to a 2.1, according to early numbers from Nielsen.

Also, "Modern Family" was the highest-rated show in the key 18-to-49 demographic, though it slipped a bit from its last original episode three weeks ago to a rating of 3.8. It gained slightly in total viewership to an average of 10.6 million. Elsewhere on ABC, "The Middle," "Back in the Game" and a much talked-about episode of "Nashville" saw single-digit gains.

Overall, ABC was second in the advertiser-desired demo, with a 2.2, in which a rating point equals about 1.3 million young-adult viewers. Its average total viewership came in at 7.11 million.

CBS won the night (2.4 rating; 10.5 million viewers) with help from "Criminal Minds" (Wednesday's most-watched show), which grew 17% from last week to a 2.7 in 18-49 and drew 11.6 million viewers. "Survivor" fell a tad to a 2.4 and "CSI" rose to a 1.9.

Fox recovered from a rough previous week, gaining 13% to a 1.7 in the demo and rising 29% to 5.8 total viewers on average. Last week's episode was marred by a voting error that forced a Thursday do-over.

On NBC, "Law & Order: SVU" hit its highest rating in nearly a month, increasing 7% to a 1.6 in the demo. "Revolution" is still pulling a 1.4 -- for the fifth week in a row, in fact. A 10 p.m. "Dateline NBC" drew a 1.1 and 5 million viewers.

The CW looked solid with comic book series "Arrow," which rose 10% in 18-49 to a 1.1, matching its season high, and "Tomorrow People," which held steady with last week's 0.6.

"The Biggest Loser" producers continue to stay mum in the face of "cheating scandal" headlines. But one person who is talking -- kind of -- says the return of "American Idol" winner Ruben Studdard is the real deal.

After 10 people were shot — seven of them in one incident — overnight in Baltimore following the city's most violent month in decades, police announced Sunday that 10 federal agents will embed with the city's homicide unit for the next two months.

Interim Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis announced a reorganization of the department in an email to police Saturday night, formally promoting or moving 28 people into new roles and undoing some changes made by his predecessor Anthony W. Batts.